Ban Ki-moon: 'My replacement should be a woman'

The secretary-general says it's "high time" for female leadership at the United Nations.

16 Aug 2016 11:07 GMT

The decision lies with the Security Council, which recommends a candidate to the General Assembly [Reuters]

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has said a woman should lead the United Nations for the first time since it was set up more than 70 years ago.

As he nears the end of his second five-year term, Ban said it was "high time" for a female secretary-general after eight men in a row have led the organisation.

There are 11 candidates vying to succeed Ban: six men and five women.

Ban stressed that the decision was not up to him, but to the 15-member security council, which must recommend a candidate to the 193-member general assembly for an approval usually seen as rubber-stamping.

"We have many distinguished and eminent women leaders in national governments or other organisations or even business communities, political communities, and cultural and every aspect of our life," Ban said.

Without giving any names, he said there were "many distinguished, motivated women leaders who can really change this world, who can actively engage with the other leaders of the world".

"So that’s my humble suggestion, but that’s up to member states," Ban said during a visit to the home of 99-year-old Libba Patterson in Novato, California, where he spent his first days in the United States as an 18-year-old student from South Korea.

He praised the general assembly for holding the first ever public hearings for all the candidates.

The UN Debate

By tradition, the job of secretary-general has rotated among different regions of the world. Officials from Asia, Africa, Latin America and western Europe have all held the post.

East European nations, including Russia, argue that they have never had a secretary-general and it is their turn. A group of 56 nations are campaigning for the first female UN chief.

The security council has held two informal polls in which 12 candidates participated, and in each the highest-ranked woman was in third place, a disappointment to many.

Antonio Guterres, a former Portuguese prime minister who has also headed the UN refugee agency, topped both polls.

In the first straw poll, Irina Bokova of Bulgaria, who heads UNESCO, came in third but in the second she dropped to fifth. In the second poll, Argentina’s foreign minister Susana Malcorra, who was Ban's former chief of staff, moved up to third. The former Croatian foreign minister Vesna Pusic, who came last in the first poll, dropped out.

The three other female candidates are New Zealand’s former prime minister Helen Clark, who heads the UN Development Programme; Christiana Figueres of Costa Rica, a UN official who played a key role in shaping last December’s historic agreement to fight climate change; and the former Moldovan foreign minister, Natalia Gherman.

The security council has scheduled another straw poll on August 29 and at least one, possibly two, more are expected to be held in September.